I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry Critic Reviews

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Variety | Brian LowryAdd Critic to Favorites

The kind of buddy comedy Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau might have starred in 40 years ago, when the material would have felt less dated, if no less silly.Read the full review

USA Today | Claudia PuigAdd Critic to Favorites

A movie that gives marriage, homosexuality, friendship, firefighters, children and nearly everything else a bad name.Read the full review

Washington Post | Desson ThomsonAdd Critic to Favorites

Essentially, Chuck & Larry is an oafish chance for audiences to laugh at gay-bashing jokes and then feel morally redeemed for doing so -- courtesy of an obligatory wrap-up scene that reminds us that homosexuals are humans, too.Read the full review

ReelViews | James BerardinelliAdd Critic to Favorites

There's nothing here to appreciate for anyone who isn't a Sandler fan and, unfortunately, too little even for those who have dubbed themselves lifelong supporters.Read the full review

Wall Street Journal | Joanne KaufmanAdd Critic to Favorites

In under two hours, the synthetic, insufferable I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry manages to insult gays, straights, men, women, children, African-Americans, Asians, pastors, mailmen, insurance adjusters, firemen, doctors -- and fans of show music. That's championship stuff.Read the full review

Los Angeles Times | Kevin CrustAdd Critic to Favorites

Fails to deliver on its main promise of big laughs, which is the film's truly unforgivable sin.Read the full review

The Hollywood Reporter | Kirk HoneycuttAdd Critic to Favorites

The curious thing here is that Alexander Payne and Jim Taylor rewrote this long-in-development screenplay. Yet the authors of such smart comedies as "Sideways," "About Schmidt" and "Citizen Ruth" can't move the film away from the world of easy laughs and sitcom jokes into a realm where sexual prejudices and presumptions get examined in a whimsical yet insightful manner.Read the full review

Entertainment Weekly | Lisa SchwarzbaumAdd Critic to Favorites

Myself, I felt victimized by the stereotype shtick of reliably grating Rob Schneider as a Canadian-Japanese wedding-chapel minister from SNL castoff hell. But maybe that's just because this movie encourages sensitivity by hitting everyone over the head with its humor hammer.Read the full review

The New York Times | Manohla DargisAdd Critic to Favorites

Sporadically funny, casually sexist, blithely racist and about as visually sophisticated as a parking-garage surveillance video.Read the full review

San Francisco Chronicle | Peter HartlaubAdd Critic to Favorites

Despite the fact that the movie covers some new cinematic territory, much of the humor feels recycled, mostly from the "Seinfeld" episodes "The Boyfriend" (the one where Jerry has a man crush on Keith Hernandez) and "The Outing."Read the full review

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